Over the last few days, I’ve seen many people arguing that 30% is a fair share, and because of that, Apple shouldn’t be legally enforced to change their rules. If it’s fair - we can have that discussion. But what we should be really defending is that a government shouldn’t decide how Apple manages a platform. No matter if the fee is 30, 90 or 0%.
iPhone OS 1.0 didn’t have third party apps at all. Apple could have sticked with that decision, because of i.e. security. Or make a totally different concept and even exclude Safari. That’s not the case - they have an App Store as the only place to install apps, for whatever reason (profits, security, a mix a both, etc.), with certain conditions. Devs can voluntarily join that private business, and/or complain that the rules are not good. But it’s the Apple private sphere.
Even people who support acting against monopolies shouldn’t support this, the field of application should the public sphere, and Apple has less than 20% global market share. An analogy with retailers: it would be absurd to enforce a company with 40% market share to sell some products when they don’t want to do it. And don’t get me wrong, I’m also against what regulators did to Microsoft and Explorer.
We like Apple with its upsides and downsides. And we’d want them to change some things, but that’s their offer as a company, and we can’t and shouldn’t decide for them. I’m free to leave any time I want, and I actively don’t like Android’s approach to download third party apps outside the Play Store, but that’s what the market offers and I’d stick to it.
iPhone OS 1.0 didn’t have third party apps at all. Apple could have sticked with that decision, because of i.e. security. Or make a totally different concept and even exclude Safari. That’s not the case - they have an App Store as the only place to install apps, for whatever reason (profits, security, a mix a both, etc.), with certain conditions. Devs can voluntarily join that private business, and/or complain that the rules are not good. But it’s the Apple private sphere.
Even people who support acting against monopolies shouldn’t support this, the field of application should the public sphere, and Apple has less than 20% global market share. An analogy with retailers: it would be absurd to enforce a company with 40% market share to sell some products when they don’t want to do it. And don’t get me wrong, I’m also against what regulators did to Microsoft and Explorer.
We like Apple with its upsides and downsides. And we’d want them to change some things, but that’s their offer as a company, and we can’t and shouldn’t decide for them. I’m free to leave any time I want, and I actively don’t like Android’s approach to download third party apps outside the Play Store, but that’s what the market offers and I’d stick to it.